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Opinion/Editorials |
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Stop demonising the Army in Kashmir -
Pioneer
Had it not been for the extremists and their violent agenda, Jammu & Kashmir would have been another peaceful State with an international border, writes Neelakantan. Much outrage is being expressed over a new book, The Meadow, authored by Adrian Levy and Cathy Scott-Clark, which puts the blame on a high profile abduction and killing of five foreign tourists in Kashmir in the late 90s on the Indian Army and security agencies. The first assumption ,of course, is that this is indeed true, since, as an eminent journalist pointed out in his piece, this has never been spoken about at all — which is a rarity in a world that is notoriously known for ‘open secrets’.
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After four years of UPA 2, the India story looks bleak -
Venky Vembu, FirstPost
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Vinod Rai brought credibility to CAG’s office -
Pioneer
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Uniform national licences in telecom are overdue -
Business Standard
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Watching the watchmen -
Arghya Sengupta, Hindu
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Underperforming even in good times -
Arvind Subramanian, Business Standard
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Amartya Sen is wrong in his claim that delay in Food Bill killing a thousand every week -
Swaminathan S Anklesaria Aiyar, Economic Times
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Birthday bumps -
Indian Express
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The Li effect: India and China have acknowledged their differences, a start towards resolving them -
Times of India
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A legit silence -
Fali S Nariman, Asian Age
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Why China’s riches won’t bring it freedom -
Pankaj Mishra, EconomicTimes
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Fancying his chance to be PM -
Sandipan Deb, India Today
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The uncrowned emperor -
Pioneer
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Whose cinema is it anyway? -
Vanita Kohli-Khandekar, Business Standard
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On the defensive on too many occasions -
Sandhya Jain, Pioneer
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Chinese PM Li’s India visit: Building trust is the challenge -
Tarun Vijay, Times of India
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Dealing with India’s China problem -
Mint
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Nawaz Sharif should not hold back on boosting India-Pakistan ties -
Times of India
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The evil that men do... -
Financial Express
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Pakistan 2.0 -
Komail Aijazuddin, Indian Express
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The celebration of wealth in The Great Gatsby -
AO Scott, Indian Express
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A welcome candour -
Indian Express
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Obama’s tapped-out trust -
George F Will, WashingtonPost
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Richard Milhous Obama -
Carl M Cannon, Real Clear Politics
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A handshake across the Himalayas -
Li Keqiang, Hindu
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The Prime Minister's position is untenable -
Balbir Punj, Pioneer
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The UPA 2 government was conceived in corruption – and never really recovered from that taint. Right from the day the election results came in, the back-channel negotiations began for the reappointment of A Raja as Telecom Minister to advance the interests of certain telecom majors (in return for illegal gratification). It was an enterprise which set the stage for India’s biggest corruption scandal and virtually set the political tone for the rest of the four years. As subsequent exposes have established, Manmohan Singh and other key Ministers knew full well that mischief was afoot, but pointedly looked the other way. That was the beginning of the slide, and the UPA government in general – and Manmohan Singh in particular – was mortally wounded from that episode. But rather than press ahead with remedial action, the government slid further into the cesspool of corruption.
Venky Vembu |
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Split with Nitish will only boost BJP in Bihar - K Balakrishnan, LensOnNews WITH THE BJP seemingly decided on projecting Narendra Modi as its PM candidate and its close ally Nitish Kumar of JD(U) equally firm in his opposition to the idea, a split in the NDA alliance looks inevitable; most observers think it’s not a question of if, but when. |
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